
The 1973 -P and -D Clad Ike Dollar - the Sleeper of US Modern Coinage Collections
As silver was removed from circulating coinage in the US, the US designed that were generally created for silver never adapted well to the Copper-Nickel coinage and the metal itself, despite being almost 90% copper, is quite hard, and easily scratched. It is a very utilitarian material used in salt water piping, boat hulls, etc. When I think back on this, it seems that they gave no consideration to the beauty of the minted coins when choosing the material at all. Clearly this is the kind of decision made by an entrenched government bureaucracy. The got coins, but face it, for 40+ years we have been stuck with coins that suck. The material wears out of the dyes, doesn't impress deeply or sharply, and the quality of the coins has been constantly bad, especially when coupled with high speed presses. In the wake of this, the US Mint decided to bring back the US Dollar coin, largely for the use of Las Vegas slot machines. When Eisenhower died in 1969, this gave imputes for silver commemorative and clad circulating dollars to be minted. Republicans where particularly happy to get the coin out as coinage was dominated with Democrats, with Roosevelt, and Kennedy. The Kennedy half was a real claw in the side, and Eisenhower's former VP, Richard Nixon, was all too pleased to see his former running mate have equal time. Additionally, the success of the US moon landings begged for a big splashy propaganda outlet, and the Ike Dollars covered all these grounds. The Silver Ikes were well designed and lovely. The Clad design just never really worked and coins were sincerely ugly. They often came out looking like big Nickel plugs (even though they were actually more copper). They were poorly minted, hard, cold, and clanked in the till when used in the register. Outside of the casinos, they were disliked except as novelty pieces. As a 7 year old child at these times, I liked them in my collections draw. But these things were not going to be carried around in peoples pockets. By 1973, the mint stopped producing them for circulation. Already astute collectors were pouring over rolls of Ikes looking for the very rare decent example. But this was not an option for 1973, as there were not rolls to be had. The 1973 Ikes were limited to the special edition mint sets that were sold that included both Denver and Philadelphia. This results in a real shortage of collectable 1973 Ikes. It also meant that collectors tore through hundreds of thousands of mint sets to find decent Ikes. As we are reach 50 years after these events, appreciation of these coins is coming into focus and the 1973 Ike is proving to be the hardest of the Ike series to find in high MS state. All the clad Ikes are conditional rarities in gem states. The coins were so badly produced that it is actually difficult to grade them. Coins that might be 62 grade in the Morgan series would be hotly sort after gem Ikes for the 1973 Clad series. The result is that Ike prices are quickly being propelled to record values. High grade Ikes are escalating in prices and showing a very strong market, and this will likely continue for the rest of my life, and likely yours as well.